8 Ways To Use Twitter Lists
December 28, 2009 on 10:28 am | In Cause Marketing, Customer Service, My Creative Team, News, Tools, Twitter, twittering journalists | View CommentsUPDATE: We just launched our Fortune 100 Twitter list. Feel free to follow it or any of our lists mentioned below.
We talked recently about the Twitter lists set up by My Creative Team. Are you using Twitter lists? Tell us about it.
We now have a Twittering Media Outlet List, a Twittering US Journalist List, and a Twittering Canadian Journalist List. Because Hootsuite – our favorite Twitter appliance – now allows you to import your lists, we also set up a Social Media List of our favorites in that category.
We have found a number of ways to utilize Twitter lists. Let’s take a couple of minutes to think about the how-tos of lists.
1. Experts. We established our social media list for the purpose of following experts in this milieu.
2. Social media monitoring. There’s a good piece on this at Fresh Networks‘ blog.
3. Industry news monitoring. We have set up the Twittering Media Outlets list to keep up with breaking news. You also could set up niche news monitoring lists, as we are going to do for our client, Camstar Systems, so we can keep up-to-date on topics such as manufacturing execution and quality management.
4. Employees. A number of businesses, ranging from Mashable to the New York Times, have set up employee lists. This could be a good customer service tool for your company, particularly if you work for a Fortune 1000 size firm.
5. Promote Causes. NonProfit Tech 2.0 has a post about how to use Twitter lists for promoting non-profits and causes.
6. Geo-Specific Lists. My Creative Team has been listed in a number of Charlotte, NC-area Twitter lists, like this one. This is a good way to keep up with what’s happening where you live, or where you used to live.
7. News Sources. Poynter Online has a solid post telling journalists how to use Twitter lists to help streamline their jobs. Mashable also has a piece on how journalists are using Twitter lists.
8. Job Search. Looking for a job? Set up a list of companies for which you would like to work, so you can get a sense of the corporate culture. Add executive search contacts to the list so you can discover what jobs are available.
Those are just a few ways to use Twitter lists. Got other ideas?
Oh, before you set up your own list, there may already be one out there. Check Listorious, the directory of Twitter lists. Here’s one we found about job searches.
Top Content 2009 Edition
December 18, 2009 on 12:31 pm | In Brand, Branding, Customer Retention, Marketing, Media, Twitter, twittering journalists | View CommentsIn case you missed some of our most read content this year, below is a sample of the top posts of 2009. Is your favorite here?
Of Spokesmen & Sluts
December 15, 2009 on 11:23 am | In Advertising, Brand, Branding, Marketing | View CommentsI would never recommend that a client select a celebrity to be a spokesman for its products. Period. End of story. I know the potential benefits of using the right celebrity to draw attention to your company, product or service. I just don’t think it is worth the possible problems.
Celebrities often seem to have more than their share of moral failings. So, when they fall off the straight and narrow path, the accompanying crash is louder than it would be for you or me.
Whether it’s a pro golfer running around with porn stars and sluts, an angelic faced Ivory Snow pitchwoman who turns out to be a porn star or the world’s best swimmer taking hits off a bong, if you align your brand too closely with a celebrity, you are asking for trouble. You are ceding the brand to someone over whom you have no control.
I’d rather tie my brand to a brand promise – the statement I make to customers that spells out what they should expect in interactions with me, my people, as well as my products and services. Here, I have some control.
Then, there’s the whole question of whether the celebrity overshadows the brand. Can you name a celebrity and correctly identify the companies for which he or she speaks? It’s like beer commercials that rely on humor to get your attention but once they are over, you can’t name the brand because the commercial didn’t tether the humor to the brand promise.
What do you think about the value of celebrity spokesmen?
Time To Plan
December 14, 2009 on 9:42 am | In Advertising, FaceBook, LinkedIn, Marketing, My Creative Team, Networking, New Business, audience | View CommentsThere’s usually some downtime at work around the holidays. What are you doing with your break? I’m using mine to meet with clients and prospects and to complete my planning for 2010. Do you have a marketing plan for the year? What new items are you incorporating into your plan?
Here are a few things I’m thinking about for 2010.
How much should I budget – both in terms of my time and money – toward marketing and PR? Does it make sense to spend it in traditional marketing, in PR, in direct marketing, in social media or in some combination?
Have the media habits of my clients and prospects – marketers and HR executives in Fortune 1000 companies – changed? With which media are they spending more time and which ones have they abandoned? Where is their pain in 2010? Are they still short-staffed and looking for outside resources to round out their teams?
Based on some of the research I’m seeing, it looks like marketing budgets will be up a bit this year. According to eMarketer,
Next year, while broadcast television, radio, newspaper and magazine spending continue to downsize, though more slowly than in 2009, online ad spending will enjoy a nice bump-up: eMarketer currently forecasts 5.5% growth. And the increase won’t all come from search—banner ads will grow 3.3%, and online video will jump by 40%.
This is shaping up perfectly for My Creative Team, since we have a great deal of expertise in the online environment and in developing flash animation and corporate video for online use.
LinkedIn now connects me to 52 million professionals. Is there a better way to utilize my nearly 600 connections on this social platform? How can I use LinkedIn’s advertising capabilities to reach my target audience, specifically the HR audience? We develop a great deal of employee communication and training materials for Nucor, and would like to expand into HR with other Fortune 1000 firms.
Does a My Creative Team presence on Facebook still make sense since we are focused on Fortune 1000 contacts?
Tell us what you are thinking about. We’d love to hear your thoughts on how you plan to market in 2010.
Be Relevant
December 7, 2009 on 9:49 am | In Advertising, Brand, Branding, Marketing, audience, psychographics | Comments OffIt comes as no surprise to me that Americans are trying harder than ever to avoid advertising. According to a new study by Synovate,
More than four in 10 US consumers said they were skipping ads on TV and the radio as well as avoiding Websites with intrusive ads more in 2009 than they were the year before.
Why, you ask? Because advertising is increasingly less relevant. We’ve discussed this before: advertising needs to be relevant, original and impactful or consumers will avoid it like the plague. And they certainly won’t share the ad with their friends.
When asked about positive ad-related activities, such as searching for advertisements online, sharing and discussing ads with friends, or following brands on Facebook and Twitter, responses were in the single digits. Most consumers reported never doing any such activities.
Relevant ads get shared. But most ads aren’t relevant because the advertiser hasn’t done the hard part: determining who his target audience is from a demographic and psychographic perspective. The more you know about the customer, the easier it is for your creatives to develop relevant, original and impactful messages, and to determine the best ways and vehicles through which to disseminate your messages.
But I’m not letting the agencies off the hook here either. Too often, the agency goes for the easy, humorous approach because they know that using humor increases likeability of the brand. Here’s the problem with that: they inject the humor but leave the brand message out of the equation. How many times have you laughed at a beer commercial only to say after it was over, “whose ad was that?”
Remember, understand your customer and ensure your agency is developing relevant, original and impactful ads for you, or save your money for something besides advertising.
Feeling Charitable
December 2, 2009 on 7:03 pm | In Cause Marketing, Charitable Giving, Charity, Marketing | View CommentsI need your help. I want to get more people signed up for the My Creative Team monthly enewsletter. So, I’ve decided to donate a dollar to charity for every person who signs up between now and Christmas Eve. Even if you decide to opt-out after Christmas, I’ll donate up to $1,500 to the Crisis Assistance Ministry. Why Crisis Assistance Ministry? Because, as they say on their website,
When there is nowhere else to turn, we provide emergency financial assistance, clothing and household goods to families in need.
The need this year among the so-called “working poor” is profound. Because they are actually working and making some money, they get very little, if any, government assistance. The help of Crisis Assistance often means the difference between eating and not eating.
Will you help me reach my goal of 1,500 new subscribers so that together we can help the truly needy? Sign up here.
Please spread the word to your friends, particularly those in marketing and HR at Fortune 1000 size companies, since that’s our target market. Additionally, feel free to share this across your social networks like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Thanks for your help. Are you doing anything charitable this year? Tell us your story.
How About Giving Charities A Holiday This Year?
December 1, 2009 on 5:36 pm | In Cause Marketing, Charitable Giving, Charity, My Creative Team | View CommentsDespite a recession, Americans spent more on holiday shopping in two months in 2008 than they did all year on charitable giving. Holiday retail sales for November and December 2008 in the general merchandise category totaled roughly $460 billion, according to the National Retail Federation. Charitable giving for 2008 declined to $307 billion from $314 billion in 2007.
Don’t get me wrong – I am pro-capitalism. But I think that Americans should be giving at least as much to charity as they are spending on holiday gifts. So, we started a program called Holiday For Charity in 2002, and once again My Creative Team is promoting the program that provides some simple ways to help the less fortunate.
Here’s how Holiday For Charity works:
1. sell the holiday gifts you receive online at eBay’s GivingWorks, and donate the proceeds to charity
2. register and shop at iGive.com, whose merchants donate a portion of each transaction to the charities of your choice
3. offer to do volunteer work in lieu of buying holiday gifts
4. donate directly to charity in lieu of buying holiday gifts for clients and customers
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